First of all, read the statement and understand what it means.
"The temperature was at least 36 degrees" means the temperature was 36 degrees or more, that is, "greater than or equal to 36 degrees".
Second. understand that we are comparing "temperature" to "36 degrees". That is, the variable will represent temperature. I like to use single-letter variable names that remind me of what they represent, so I would choose "t" or "T". You can use "kay" to remind you of something hot, or "splat" or "q" or anything else you might choose. It doesn't have to be a single letter, nor does it have to make any sense. (Later, when you revisit the problem, it works better if it *does* make sense.)
We've already figured out we want the comparison to be "greater than or equal to", so we need both the > symbol and the = symbol.
Of course, the number is 36, since you are told to use the number given. In some problems, you may want to convert the number to different units before you put it in the comparison.
T ≥ 36
Answer:
the function R is always 2 above on the y axis to the function G
Step-by-step explanation:
adding 2 to x makes the function go up on the y axis
Jason's airplane flew the farthest. When you find a common denominator for all the fractions, 8 2/3 is the largest,
Sara = 8 6/12
Jason = 8 8/12,
Michael = 8 3/12,
Denise = 8 2/12,
Answer:
The correct answer should be C.
answer: The wingspan is 36 m.
Using a proportion to solve this, we write the scale factor as a ratio first: 19/38, since 19 is the size of the model's length and 38 is the real length. For the second ratio, we have 18 for the size of the model wingspan and x for the real wingspan:
19/38 = 18/x
Cross multiply:
19*x = 38*18
19x = 684